I've noticed in a lot of the histories I've been reading about WW2 aerial battles etc that the German kill counts are much much higher than Allied scores.
Its obvious from reading pilots accounts that the RAF at least were pretty stringent in awarding a confirmed kill, you basically HAD to see the plane crash and preferably have a witness too. Even if the plane is on fire and you see the pilot jettison his canopy, if you didn't see it crash or the pilot actually bail then you could only claim a probable.
Most of the Allied 'top' aces only had scores around the 20's or so (with some exceptions of course) but the Germans seem to consistently have MASSIVE scores...
We're talkingscores up in the 60's, 70's, 80's and even 90's! How come? Surely the Spanish Civil War can't have given them THAT much of lead in df skills? I know that they had superior aircraft and tactics in the early stages of the war and were basically dominant in the skies, but after '41 it appears to be a much more even playing field, so what gives?
Was the German scoring more relaxed in its awards of a kill? Did they not bother with 'probables' and just awarded a kills or nothing? Or maybe a shared kill counted as a whole kill no matter how many planes were involved in downing the same aircraft..
Anyone know, cos I find it hard to believe, expecially given that on some days during BoB, the Germans claimed more RAF planes shot down than were actually in the air!